1889 —1925 
A RECORD AND 


9 2:3 
THE WOMAN’S AUXILIARY TO 
THE NATIONAL COUNCIL 
281 Fourth Avenue New York 





1889—1925 
A Record and a Hope 


In 1889: $2,188.64. 
In 1922: $681,145.09. 


In 1889: One woman missionary supported and one 
mission church in Alaska built. 

In 1922: Nearly 200 women missionaries supported 
and churches and schools in all parts of the mission 
field. 

One must search far to find a parallel to this record. 
What is the history of an endeavor so striking in its 
growth and so far reaching in its influence? 

On October llth, 1883, in the Church of the 
Epiphany, Philadelphia, the Holy Communion was 
administered for the first time to the women of the 
Auxiliary gathered as a representative body. At the 
service and at the meeting which followed the sum of 
$371.21 was collected, which was divided between the 
foreign and domestic fields. 

The next Triennial was held in the year 1886, and 
at the service preceding the Woman’s Auxiliary 
meeting the offering was $82.71, which went to the 
Bishop of Florida for work among the colored people 
of that diocese. These sums were disappointingly 
small, and such a record had its lesson for the Auxil- 


3 


iary. Some of the women had been set to thinking 
with the result that shortly before the time of the 
next Triennial a suggestion was made which resulted 
in the establishment of the United Thank Offering. 

A member of the Auxiliary, Mrs. Soule, then of the 
diocese of Pittsburgh, in a letter to Miss Emery made 
the suggestion that at the coming meeting of the 
women an offering by all for some one purpose be 
made. To this was added the request that the secre- 
tary should select an object and that an account of 
the plan be published in The Spirit of Missions at 
least one month before the meeting—a sharp contrast 
to our present day methods! 

Miss Emery’s suggestion was that whatever sum 
should be offered at the Triennial service should be 
divided equally between the domestic and foreign 
fields; a church building with furnishings for Anvik, 
Alaska, and the outfit, traveling expenses and a year’s 
salary for a new missionary teacher needed in Japan 
were proposed, each object requiring about one 
thousand dollars. 

The first United Thank Offering was, therefore, 
with only a month’s preparation, presented at the 
Triennial service held in the Church of the Holy 
Communion, New York, on October 3rd, 1889. The 
result was looked for with great eagerness and it 
was with very real disappointment that the sum was 
found to be only four hundred dollars—one thousand 
six hundred dollars less than desired. 

One member of the Auxiliary came to the rescue, 
giving the thousand dollars needed for the church 

4 


building at Anvik, and the remaining six hundred 
dollars was contributed, which made possible the 
sending of the first United Thank Offering mission- 
ary. 

As the years passed, interest in the new offering 
grew. Throughout the Auxiliary there developed the 
feeling that a service of thanksgiving could not be 
complete without an offering of thankfulness. The 
system with which we are familiar has been the re- 
sult, until now there is hardly a diocese or missionary 
district without its United Thank Offering Custodian, 
while throughout the Church, in the city parish as in 
that of the rural community, in mission stations in 
the foreign field and at home, and among isolated 
Church-women far from the privileges of parish life, 
the little blue boxes have a place. 

This offering most truly deserves the term United. 
More than one hundred dioceses and missionary dis- 
tricts have a share in it. The Woman’s Missionary 
Band in China and the Woman’s Auxiliary in Japan 
give faithfully and generously. The women in 
Alaska make bags and moccasins for sale. The In- 
dian women on the reservations in South Dakota sell 
lace and bead work, while the contents of the little 
blue boxes are sent from farms in Maine, from 
ranches in the West, from rural parishes and from 
those in the great cities; from American Church- 
women living in Europe, from Brazil, from Mexico, 
from the Philippines, and from New York’s East Side. 
Is it any wonder that the record of such consecrated 
and united effort should be a notable one? It is as 
follows: 


1889: 


1892: 


1895: 


1898: 


1901: 


1904: 


1907: 


Church of the Holy Communion, 
New. York® @ity .00 oo sen eee 


For church building, Christ Church, 
Anvik, Alaska, and for sending Miss 
Lovell to Japan. 


Saint Paul’s Church, Baltimore, 
Md.) 2. 2 ee ee 


Christ Church, Saint Paul, Minn. 


These two offerings — $76,551.51 — were 
constituted a Missionary Episcopate 
Fund: Interest paying salary, first 
three years the Bishop of Oklahoma; 
since then the Bishop of Alaska. 


Trinity Church, Washington, D. C. 


With this sum fifty women were sent to 
the mission field and sustained for five 
years. 


Grace Church, San Francisco, Cal. 


This offering was divided among the 
missionary bishops, one share being re- 
served for work among the colored peo- 
ple of the South. Churches and houses 
were built, land was purchased, mis- 
sions were started. It is not too much 
to say that throughout the entire mis- 
sion field, the results of this offering 
were felt. 


Trinity Church, Boston, Mass..... 


Used for the training, sending and sup- 
port of women workers and the care 


of the sick and disabled. 
Holy Trinity Church, Richmond, 


Vairoiniaves: sent. ee SORA ADE 

Used for the same purpose as that of 
1904, with the exception that $10,000 
was reserved for the building of a 
training school for Bible women, in 
Sendai, Japan. 


6 


$ 2,188.64 


20,353.16 
56,198.35 


82,742.87 


107,027.83 


150,000.00 


224,251.55 


1910: 


ae 


1916: 


1919: 


1922: 


1925: 


Christ Church, Cincinnati, Ohio. .$243,360.95 


For women workers; $15,000 being used 
for building purposes — $10,000 at 
Saint Hilda’s School for Girls, Wu- 
chang, China; and $5,000 at Saint 
Augustine’s School, Raleigh, N. C. 


Cathedral of Saint John the Di- 
vine, New York City.......... 

For women workers, and $15,000 for 
Hooker School, Guadalajara, Mexico 
(held in reserve), and $5,000 for St. 
Augustine’s, Raleigh, North Carolina. 


Christ Church Cathedral, Saint 


Louis, Missouri ....... FA ae 
For women workers. 


Saint Paul’s Cathedral, Detroit, 
LIFES) CW P50 Chee ta bee os ein er nie 

For women workers, with $5,000 for school 
at Valle Crucis, North Carolina; $5,000 
for schoo! at Farmington, New Mexico; 
$5,000 for school at Guantanamo, Cuba; 
and $5,000 for chapel at Saint Hilda’s 
School, Wuchang, China. 


Trinity Church, Portland, Ore.... 


For women workers after one-tenth of 
the offering has been set aside as 
a permanent trust fund, the income 
to be applied to the support of retired 
United Thank Offering workers; 
$15,000 towards the Florence Greeley 
Memorial Dormitory for Girls, St. 
Paul’s School, Lawrenceville, Virginia; 
$15,000 toward the Nurses’ Home, St. 
Luke’s Hospital, Tokyo, Japan. 


New Orleans, Louisiana.......... 

For women workers after one-tenth of the 
offering has been set aside and added 
to the permanent trust fund to be ap- 
plied to the support of retired United 
Thank Offering workers; the sum of 
not less than $25,000 is to be devoted 
to mission buildings. 


7 


306,496.66 


353,619.76 


468,060.41 


681,145.09 


it) 


So much for the past—what of the future? 

In the American Church there are somewhat more 
than five hundred thousand women communicants. 
To far the greater number, the United Thank Offer- 
ing is unknown. If each one of these women were 
to take a United Thank Offering Box and were to 
give even as little as one cent a day, in one year the 
Offering would amount to the sum of $1,825,000 and 
at the end of three years our Triennial Offering would 
be $5,475,000! The thought of it kindles one’s imag- 
ination. So great an Offering would open many doors 
of opportunity, doors now closed, when, if the women 
of the Church would have it so, they might swing 
wide. 

On the walls of a parish house in a far western 
city hangs a poster with these words: 


Who should give to the United Thank Offering? 
Every woman and girl in the Episcopal Church! 


—Every woman and girl in the Church joining in 
a great Thank Offering of prayer, of service, and of 
gifts! A United Thank Offering indeed! 
Let us hope for this great end. Let us pray for 
it, let us plan for it, let us accomplish it. 
Surely it can be done. Will you help? 
“Holy offerings, rich and rare, 
Offerings of praise and prayer, 
Purer life and purpose high, 
Clasped hands, uplifted eye, 
Lowly acts of adoration 
To the God of our salvation; 
On His altar laid, we leave them; 
Christ, present them! God, receive them!” 


8 


WIN 


LIST OF 
UNITED THANK OFFERING MISSIONARIES 


Corrected to May 1, 1923 


In this list the workers are classified as follows: (1) Evan- 
gelistic work; (2) Educational; (3) Medical; (4) Industrial 
and Social; (5) Secretarial. 


DOMESTIC 


Alaska 
Allakaket: Miss Amelia Hill (3). 
Anvik: Miss Margaret Bartberger (3). 
Ketchikan: Miss Henrietta Barlow (3); Mrs. Elizabeth M. 
Molineux (2). 
Nenana: Miss Bessie B. Blacknall (2); Miss Alice Wright (2). 
Stephen’s Village: Deaconess H. M. Bedell (2). 


Arizona 


Fort Defiance: Hospital of the Good Shepherd: Miss Anne E. 
Cady (3); Miss Annie Powell (3); Miss Frances V. Daven- 
port (3). 

Arkansas 


Winslow: Miss Clara D. Batjer (2); Helen Dunlap School. 


California 

Berkeley: Deaconess Anita Hodgkin, Dean of the Deaconess 
Training School of the Pacific. 
Colorado 


Aspen: Miss Mabel White (1), Box 61. 


Colorado Springs: Miss Nora Van Nostrand (1), 619 N. Cas. 
cade Avenue. 
Duluth 


Wilkinson: Mrs. Jacob Hudson. 


East Carolina 


Kinston: Miss Florence B. Huband, 409 Castle St., Wilmington, 
North Carolina. 


9 


Fond du Lac 


Oneida, Wis.: House of the Holy Nativity: Sister Amy (1); 
Sister Feaneee (1). 


Honolulu 


Honolulu: St. Mary’s Mission, 2108 S. King Street: Miss Sara 
Chung (4); Miss Hilda Van Deerlin (4). 


Kapahula: Mrs. Gaelic Fitzgerald (2); Mrs. Celia Searle (2). 


Idaho 
Fort Hall: Miss A. M. Larery (1); Miss M. P. Parsons (4). 
Wallace: Miss Susan Sprague (1). 


Lexington 


Corbin, Ky.: Miss Margaret Viall (2) and (4); Mrs. H. E. 
Wentworth (4); Mrs. Adelaide C. Somes (2). 
Lexington: Mrs. Margaret H. Jackson (2), 630 Chestnut Street. 


Los Angeles 
Los Angeles, Cal.: Deaconess Sophie R. Miller (1); 120 Rose- 
lawn Place. 
Minnesota 
Morton: Miss Susan E. Salisbury (2) and (4). 


Nevada 


Pyramid Lake Reservation, Nixon: Deaconess Lucy N. Carter. 
Moapa Indian Reservation: Mrs. Everett T. Jones. 


New Mexico 
Farmington: Miss M. C. Peters (1) and (4); Miss S. A. Me- 
Intyre (3). 
North Carolina 
Charlotte: Miss Elizabeth Miller (3). 


Raleigh: Dr. Mary V. Glenton (3); St. Agnes’ Hospital. St. 
Augustine’s School: Miss Laura E. Beard (4); Miss Mary 
L. Gates (3); Mrs. Daisy Williams (3). 


North Dakota 
Valley City: Mrs. Margaret Helferty (4), The Church Hall. 


10 


Northern Indiana 
Kokomo: Deaconess Marjorie H. Peck (1), St. Andrew’s Church. 


Oklahoma 
Muskogee: Mrs. J. L. Templeton (2), 1219 E. S. Blvd. 
Norman: Miss E. A. Roscoe (4), King Hall. 


Quincy 
Galesburg, Ill.: Deaconess Josephine Peterson (1), 381 Frank- 
lin Avenue. 
i Panama Canal Zone 
Panama: Mrs. E. S. Royce (4); Box 256, Ancon, Canal Zone. 


Philippine Islands 


Bontoc: Miss Eveline Diggs (1); Deaconess Sarah M. Peppers 
(1); Deaconess Margaret Routledge (1); Miss E. H. Whit- 
combe (1). 


Manila: St. Luke’s Hospital: Deaconess Charlotte G. Massey 
(1); Miss Lillian M. Montgomery (3); Mrs. Alice I. B. 
Massey, Miss Marion N. T. Carter (1), c/o The Rt. Rev. 
G. F. Mosher, 567 Calle; Isaac Peral, Manila. 


Sagada: Miss Eliza R. Davis (3); Deaconess Anne Hargreaves 
(1); Besao, Sagada. 
Porto Rico 
San Juan: Miss Iva Woodruff (2), Box 1115. 
Vieques: Miss S. R. Davidson (1). 


Sacramento 


Sacramento, Cal.: Deaconess A. I. Clark (1), 2620 M. Street; 
Deaconess M. S. Blakey (1), 2620 M. Street. 


Salina 
Salina: Miss Eleanor J. Ridgeway, St. Faith’s House, 146 N. 
8th Street. 
San Joaquin 
Sonora, Cal.: Deaconess E. M. Dorsey (1). 


South Dakota 


Wakpala: St. Elizabeth’s School: Deaconess Gertrude Baker 
(1); Miss Priscilla Bridge (1). 


11 


South Florida 


Orlando: Miss Caroline Cobb (2), Cathedral School; Dea- 
coness H. R. Parkhill (1), 8 E. Jefferson Street. 


Southwestern Virginia 


Callaway: Miss C. L. Davis (2) and (4); Miss M. F. Mont- 
gomery (1); Miss M. N. Strayer (2). 


Dante: Deaconess M. P. Williams (1). 

Glasgow: Miss Margaretha Williamson. 

Endicott: Miss Ora Harrison (1); Miss L. A. Newland (1). 
Keokee: Deaconess Blanche Adams (1). 


Spokane 
Colville, Wash.: Miss Agnes D. Roberts, Dayton, Wash. 
Okanogan: Miss Sarah C. Corbett. 
Roslyn: Miss Mary B. Powell, P. O. Box 180. 


Springfield 


Champaign, Ill.: Miss Maude Whitley (1), 1007 S. Wright 
Street. 


Virden: Mrs. A. D. Brackett (1). 


< Tennessee 


Monterey: Mrs. Rose Oswell (3); St. Raphael’s House. 
Sherwood: Mrs. Mabel W. MacDonald (2), Epiphany Mission. 


Upper South Carolina 
Graniteville: Miss Sarah C. Cornish (1). 


Utah 


Salt Lake City: Miss Sarah Napper (1), 819 E. Broadway; 
Deaconess M. Shepard (1), 655 N. 2nd West Street. 


Whiterocks: Miss Rosa Camfield (1). 


Western Nebraska 
Mullen: Deaconess Emma J. Smith (1). 


12 


Western North Carolina 


Glendale Springs, N. C.: Miss Jennie R. Field (4). 
High Shoals: Deaconess E. H. Crump (4). 
Legerwood: Mrs. Pearl Dobbin (4). 

Linville: Miss Irene Lasier (4). 

Penland: Miss Lucy C. Morgan (2). 

Valle Crucis: Miss Virginia Bouldin (2). 


West Texas 
Comfort: Deaconess Lucille Bickford (1). 
San Antonio: Miss Artemisia Bowden (2), St. Philip’s School. 


Wyoming 


Laramie: Mrs. Elizabeth H. Corse (2), Cathedral Home for 
Children. 
General Field Worker 


Mrs. Derrill D. Taber 


FOREIGN 


Africa, Liberia 


Barloamah: Miss Emily deW. Seaman (2). 

Cape Mount: Miss Lois M. Ford (3), St. John’s Industrial 
School; Miss M. S. Ridgely (2); St. John’s Industrial 
School. 

China, Anking 
Send mail c/o American Church Mission 

Anking: Miss Elizabeth E. Fueller (1); Miss Alice H. Gregg 
(2); Miss Alice Jeffer (3); Miss M. K. Montiero (2); Miss 
M. R. Ogden (3); Deaconess K. E. Phelps (1); Miss M. J. 
Schaad (5); Miss Velma E. Woods (2). 

Wuhu: Sister Edith Constance (1); Sister Deborah Ruth (1). 


China, Hankow 
Send mail c/o American Church Mission 


Changsha: Deaconess Gertrude Stewart (1). 
Hankow: Miss A. M. Clark (1); Miss C. A. Couch (5); Miss 
Venetia Cox (2); Deaconess Edith Hart (1); Miss Violet 
L. Hughes (2); Miss Frances C. Kennicott (2); Miss 
Miriam Bancroft (3). 
13 


Ichang: Deaconess E. W. Riebe (1). 
Shasi: Sister Anita (1); Rev. Mother Ursula (1). 


Wuchang: Miss Annie S. Brown (3); Miss E. M. Buchanan 
(2); Miss A. E. Byerly (1); Miss E. G. Dexter (3); Miss 
Pauline Flint (2); Miss Nina G. Johnson (3); Miss Mabel 
Sibson (3); Miss Edith G. Stedman (1); Miss Olive B. 
Tomlin (2); Miss Mary E. Wood (2); Miss M.’G. Cabot (3). 


China, Shanghai 
Send mail c/o American Church Mission 
Shanghai: Miss M. E. Bender (3); Miss G. L. Cooper (2); 
Dr. Ellen C. Fullerton (3); Miss E. W. Graves (2); Miss 
L. J. Graves (2); Miss L. E. Lenhart (3); Miss M. S. 
Mitchell (2); Miss Anne Piper (1); Miss Rhea G. Pumph- 
rey (3). 
Nanking: Miss Elizabeth Deahl. 
Soochow: Miss Lillian E. Minhinnick (1); Mrs. W. H. Stand- 
ring (2). 
Wusih: Miss Mabel G. Piper (3); Miss Millie E. Weir (3). 
Yangchow: Miss M. A. Bremer (2); Deaconess Katherine Put- 
nam (1). 
Zangzok: Miss Mary A. Hill (1); Deaconess T. L. Paine (1). 


Cuba 
Guantanamo: Miss Sarah W. Ashhurst (2); P. O. Box 118. 


Havana: Send mail c/o The Rt. Rev. H. R. Hulse, D.D., Nep- 
tuno 54, Havana, Cuba. Miss M. E. Corl (2); Miss Martha 
K. Cramer (2); Miss A. E. Doggett (2); Mrs. Flora Perez 
(2); Miss Gertrude Lester (2); Cathedral School, Paseo 
Y. 15, Vedado. 


Haiti 
Port-au-Prince: Miss Marianne Jones (2); c/o Rev. P. E. 
Jones, D.D. 
Japan, Kyoto 
Send mail c/o The Rt. Rev. Henry St. George Tucker, 


Kyoto, Japan 
Kyoto: Miss Marietta Ambler (2); Miss Mona C. Cannell (1); 
Miss Edith L. Foote; Miss Clara J. Neely (1); Miss Cecelia 
R. Powell (1); Miss Hallie Williams (2). 


Osaka: Miss Mary E. Laning (1). 
Yokkaichi: Miss Helen L. Tetlow (1). 


14 


Japan, Tokyo 
Send mail c/o The Rt. Rev. John McKim, D.D., 
38 Tsukiji, Tokyo, Japan 


Akita: Miss Marian Humphreys (2). 

Aomori: Deaconess E. G. Newbold (1). 

Hirosaki: Miss Dorothy Hittle (2). 

Maebashi: Miss Ada H. Wright (1). 

Mito: Miss F. M. Bristowe (1). 

Sendai: PE: V. D. Carlsen (1); Deaconess A. L. Ran- 
son (1). 

Tokyo: Miss L. H. Boyd (1); Miss C. G. Heywood (2); Miss 
Bessie McKim (2); Miss Nellie McKim (2); Miss Mabel 
R. Schaeffer (2); Mrs. Alice C. St. John (3); Miss Ruth 
Burnside (5). 

Yamagata: Miss Bessie Mead (1). 


Mexico 


Mexico City: Miss Rebecca Parker (2); c/o The Rt. Rev. H. D. 
Aves, Monterey, N. I., Mexico. 


IN TRAINING 


New York Training School for Deaconess: Miss Nancy Ambler; 
Miss A. R. Bradley; Miss D. C. Comfort; Miss Clarice 
Wheeler; Miss Ann B. Mundelein. 

Deaconess Training School of the Pacific: Miss H. A. M. Spitz. 

John Hopkins Universiy Medical College: Miss Lulu Disoway. 

Philadelphia Training School: Miss Florence Keefe; Miss Viola 
A. McGoldrick. 


RETIRED 


Alaska: Miss Florence Langdon. 

Arizona: Miss Eliza Thackara. 

Duluth: Miss Pauline Colby. 

Greece: Miss Eugenia Reymond. 

Honolulu: Mrs. L. F. Folsom; Miss Abbie S. Marsh. 

Kyoto: Miss Martha Aldrich; Miss S. P. Peck. 

Liberia: Miss Agnes P. Mahony; Miss S. A. Woodruff. 

North Carolina: Dr. Catharine P. Hayden; Miss Emma Karrer. 

Porto Rico: Miss E. H. McCullough. 

Shanghai: Miss Steva L. Dodson; Miss A. B. Richmond. 

South Dakota: Mrs. Hackaliah Burt; Miss Jennie Dickson; 
Miss Mary Francis. 

Southwestern Virginia: Deaconess A. M. Gibson. 

Tennessee: Miss Clementine Rowe. 


Tokyo: Miss Bertha R. Babcock. 
15 


CONTRIBUTIONS BY DIOCESAN BRANCHES AT 


THE LAST TWO TRIENNIALS 


1919 
Alabama oo hie tc ae camera oe eee $ 4,044.49 
Alaska vies”, dca’: cetera ctold te ak ee ee S220 
Albany vino e-foes cae coe scree ae enters 4,726.66 
Arizona cose ee tba eta eee 406.31 
A¥kansas. 22. oO. s Comcast 1,601.26 
Asheville. 2.2% .- Jick 2 ese eee ee 1,809.92 
Atlanta’ 2.455. 52s calc ee cst eet 3,679.61 
Bethlehem?.8.)s):.Se 72. to eee 7,410.52 
California’: 4522. oy tate eee 5077.13 
Central New 7 Y ork so. e 13,303.19 
Chicago so eae ae eee eee 12,332.42 
Coéloradots. aa. Pe oe ee eee 3,405.00 
Connecticutsi ts .i6 soa ee ee eee 12,487.22 
Dallas: 2.0 2. Se See eee ~ 2,160.00 
Delaware. ss 3 acdsee 7 oe eee 3,055.00 
Duluth. +. ee oe Ae eee 943.49 
East “Carolina @:.....<. +2.) sat eee 4.257258 
Eastern? Oregon «is -s0 es ees 229.01 
Easton. one nee eee eee 2,870.55 
EQiGe sc see rc cond eee eee 3,574.34 
Blorida > So c0.0 oo ee noe ee 709.08 
Fond’ dus Lace.) fe. cae eee 808.03 
GOOPrglad.. cs csielae cee ke ee Zt Les 
Hatrisburg 5. oss ons ec eee nee 3,873.64 
Honoluluds 2 eee eee 940.36 
Tdaho’ cise cee cas eee tee eee 600.00 
Indianapolist a"... .5 nent eee 1,558.15 
Towa tae ce ces oe ane eee ee eee 1,918.30 
Kansas os oo oa oe oc ee Pees te eee ho20.02 
Kentucky 40% 42055. oxn oe een 3,317.78 
Lexineton Hos <a vicre core ee aetna: 1,025.00 
Long Islande.7%-5 45-2 eee eee 9,458.66 
Lost Angeles®. vc... chee See es 6,475.50 
Louisiana ons. ens oe a te eee 6,427.37 


1922 
$9,635.17 
235.88 
6,679.71 
538.69 
2,885.00 
3,240.59 
4,905.67 
9,302.37 
7,265.93 
18,887.12 
20,000.50 
6,450.21 
18,755.30 
4,165.85 
2,780.96 
1,400.50 
8,154.28 
337.90 
4,011.76 
4,169.16 
1,484.00 
1,063.02 
3,300.89 
6,000.00 
1,202.50 
561.29 
1,703.00 
3,961.92 
1,947.84 
5,525.34 
1,252.84 
14,026.94 
12,210.00 
11,620.09 


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PASE UISAt Oe oe cr i tt ce ce ec ees ox 
BISA KES font ee tee cee cu sea 
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Northern Indiana 


Pitre eROSU CUS ee sre ks 5 
WIT) celetels: Olas ace ree Dh Siete 
We PLAS TE EY poe kp Saar an A A 
RUIN a ae cre Sete See one aes cies 
EOSOT Ey, Ok ce ese oe eee oe ees 
ReGrey IVANLAb et ee Cet Ses «ees 3 che 
Piinippine islands «..... ise see es + 
SILADUCCINSRE A Se see oc eee 
ML Ry LUMO elas cats c's vcs tes faces 
Lt ip SARE the BEAM ee SAAR ree Se aa 
TREO e ISIANCNS cota s cute nent eae ok 
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oeoer reer eee rere sees 


1919 


1,556.75 
1,127.31 
10,243.87 
28,680.82 


1,581.56 
390.00 
20,000.00 
2,106.66 
ii iotol 
810.00 
46,278.41 
5,417.43 
1,500.00 
1,266.65 
619.68 
14,588.29 
2,237.14 
938.21 
1,600.00 
62,602.00 
125.00 
5,823.40 
146.43 
2,090.70 
7,120.00 
7172.28 
330.32 
512.00 
6,694.10 
2,005.01 


1922 


2,342.75 
1,221.28 
15,847.00 
41,251.42 
10,577.29 
9,949.70 
7,065.00 
3,743.90 
7,850.00 
1,080.33 
2,260.56 
500.00 
27,000.00 
3,108.11 
17,147.66 
2,149.00 
90,092.13 
9,848.32 
2,020.00 
3,190.45 
1,096.59 
16,109.66 
2,715.16 
2,733.48 
3,170.42 
73,155.50 
175.72 
10,042.86 
65.68 
2,002.27 
8,927.59 
1,429.43 
620.00 
924.64 
8,192.78 
2,995.60 


1919 

Southern: Floridag #¢22.0 0050 ee ee 1,573.97 
Southern” Ohio. 52006 Coane one 14,639.95 
Southern Virginadsncs.0.-500 os vs 7,084.40 
Southwestern Virginia .............. 
Spokane sree cee oe 550.00 
Springheld?< 2.08 «cava icon tee 1,325.00 
Tennessee {cada vce stce etre tie eee 2,800.00 
LOX AS wale ol ce cede ey tie mare eared 2,460.10 
Utaherrr set ek. eee ome 575.00 
Vermont (400 is shee ee eee 1,365.57 
Virginia’. fai. cece cee tee ere ee 9,686.16 
Washington ts oe ce ae en ee 2 53511.69 
Western Massachusetts .............. 3,871.00 
Western Michigan .................. 1,873.27 
Western Nebraska .............. Se 796.96 
Western New ‘York......0... ae 10,505.13 
Wests Missonria. <0 cia. 7 ee eee 1,510.00 
Westy Texas) foe le ne ieee 1,610.00 
West) Virginia 2.2) 5). cee ee ee 4,489.31 
WYOMING 2. 585 esseeiets «ater es ares 670.00 
Liberigse))7- iy ot eee 
Anking?-:2 23038). 2oe be ee 30.30 
Hankow 337 2c2ei2s' eee ee 321.54 
Shanghai 2208." eoca ee hee eee ee 213.79 
Cabae. 2. So oa ee eee 352.00 
Haltiyenc es wet oe ee ee 134.50 
Kyoto “57020 cer ee ee 150.00 
Tokyoes tec ne oe ee 261.18 
Mexico ef .4 sea ee ee 20.00 
Brazil soe tee ee oe ee 300.00 
Panama Canal*Zones..). eee en 
Greece ke Ok aos oe ee 
Santas Domingom-o4.0 20 oe eee 54.87 
Miscellaneous, < cies ae ee eee 570.36 
Ttaly,eFlorences. 5..-)- eee 

TL Otals .p stot re re ek ee $468.060.41 


1922 
2,764.17 
22,184.00 
8,212.90 
5,004.69 
1,475.00 
2,801.00 
6,588.51 
6,301.38 
700.00 
2,014.42 
16,716.75 
8,167.00 
6,235.00 
3,034.46 
1,336.96 
17,000.00 
2,407.28 
2,321.38 
6,840.47 
780.00 
45.00 
35.66 
451.77 
113.88 
560.80 
48.00 
222.54 
358.40 
95.68 
207.92 
322.88 


130.55 
1,601.58 
200.00 


$681.145.09 


A United Thank Offering Pyramid 


$2188.64 


$224.251.55 
#243,360.95 
| Pees 5a 619.76" mae 
What's i be 16 Me in 1925? 














Copies of this leaflet may be obtained from The 


W oman’s Auxiliary, Church Missions House, 281 Fourth 
Avenue, New York, N. Y., by asking for W. A. 106. 





2 Ed. 5-23, 25M. D. 


